Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
George Richard Chamberlain (born March 31, 1934) is an American actor and singer who became a teen idol in the title role of the television show Dr. Kildare (1961–1966). He subsequently appeared in several miniseries, such as Shōgun (1980) and The Thorn Birds (1983) and was the first to play Jason Bourne in the 1988 television film The Bourne Identity.
Power acted in eight films, the first two in Spanish, the rest mostly English language films. Her most notable roles were as "Valentine De Villefort" in The Count of Monte Cristo (1975), with Richard Chamberlain, Donald Pleasence, and Tony Curtis, and as "Dione" in Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger (1977), starring Patrick Wayne and Jane Seymour.
Richard Chamberlain (MP for Islington West) This page was last edited on 28 May 2024, at 13:56 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution ...
The Thorn Birds is an American television miniseries broadcast on ABC from March 27 to 30, 1983. It starred Richard Chamberlain, Rachel Ward, Barbara Stanwyck, Christopher Plummer, Piper Laurie, Jean Simmons, Richard Kiley, Bryan Brown, Mare Winningham and Philip Anglim.
The plans for the Drogheda mansion from the original miniseries had been lost and the set designer had since passed away. Richard Chamberlain claimed: "They had to re-create it from the film, which was very difficult. They did an extraordinary good job, I think." [1] Principal photography began on July 24, 1995 and wrapped on September 19, 1995 ...
The Thorn Birds is a 1977 novel by Australian author Colleen McCullough.Set primarily on Drogheda—a fictional sheep station in the Australian Outback named after Drogheda, Ireland—the story focuses on the Cleary family and spans 1915 to 1969.
Related: Richard Gere's 3 Children: All About Homer, Alexander and James "I love my wife. She's incredible, a great mother," the Pretty Woman star continued. "The kids are healthy, happy. Of ...
Pilot major John Blackthorne, also known as Anjin (按針, lit. "Pilot", "Steuermann"), is the protagonist of James Clavell's 1975 novel Shōgun. The character is loosely based on the life of the 17th-century English navigator William Adams, who was the first Englishman to visit Japan.